Although it uses a standard PCB design with 7+1-phase VRM with 8+6-pin PCIe power, the EVGA GTX 1080 Ti SC Black Edition Gaming also comes with an iCX Cooling technology cooler with two fans and a white LED logo, so it comes as no surprise that it has also been slightly factory overclocked, with the GPU working at 1556MHz GPU base and 1670MHz GPU Boost clocks.

In case you missed it, the Geforce GTX 1080 Ti graphics card is based on a GP102 Pascal GPU, the same one that was used on the Nvidia Titan X graphics card and comes with 3584 CUDA cores, 224 TMUS and 88 ROPs, and 11GB of GDDR5X 11Gbps memory on a 352-bit memory interface.

The EVGA GTX 1080 Ti SC Black Edition Gaming is now available at EVGA's webshop as a limited pre-order offer with a price set at €789,99 in Europe and US $699.99 in the US. European buyers can expect it to ship on April 17th but we are not sure about those ordering from the US webshop.

Following the official launch of the Nvidia Geforce GTX 1060 with 3GB of memory, which is quite different from the original GTX 1060 6GB graphics card, EVGA has unveiled its own lineup with a total of five different versions.

Unlike the earlier launched Geforce GTX 1060 6GB, which was based on GP106 Pascal GPU with 1280 CUDA cores, the 3GB version of the same card comes with a further cut-down GP106 GPU with 1152 CUDA cores. As rumored earlier, the reference GTX 1060 3GB works at a base GPU clock of 1506MHz, GPU Boost clock of 1708MHz and comes with 3GB of GDDR5 memory clocked at 8000MHz and paired up with the same 192-bit memory interface.

Unlike the reference version, the SuperClocked version will use the same single fan dual slot cooler but with a copper core and a heatpipe and which draw power from a single 6-pin PCI-Express power connector. The SuperClock version works at a slightly higher 1607MHz base and 1835MHz GPU Boost clocks, with memory at reference 8000MHz, and it features the same 3+1-phase VRM.

Unlike those two, the SuperSuperClocked (SSC) and both FTW and the FTW+ versions are going to feature EVGA's well known ACX 3.0 cooler and draw power from an 8-pin PCIe power connector. The GTX 1060 3GB SSC version will work at the same clocks as the SC version, 1607/1835MHz and feature a 4+1 VRM.

The FTW and FTW+ version are both based on a custom PCB with 6+1-phase VRM and work at 1620MHz base and 1847MHz GPU Boost clocks for the FTW and 1632MHz base and 1860MHz GPU Boost clocks for the FTW+ version.

EVGA has decided to showcase both its custom GTX 1080 as well as a few custom GTX 1070 graphics cards at Computex 2016 show, hinting that both lineups could be similar.

Spotted by Tweaktown.com, EVGA decided to bring the Geforce GTX 1070 SuperClocked to Computex 2016 show and this one features the same ACX 3.0 cooler as the GTX 1080 version. It will probably use the same PCB and it certainly uses the same ACX 3.0 cooler.

We suspect that the entire lineup of GTX 1070 graphics cards from EVGA could be similar to the GTX 1080 lineup, including SuperClocked, FTW and Classified graphics cards as well as future Hybrid and Hydro versions.

Unfortuantely, EVGA only lists the GTX 1070 Founders Edition so we have no idea on when these custom GTX 1070 graphics cards will be available.

Following Nvidia's official retail launch of the new Geforce GTX 1080, EVGA has prepared no less than five different graphics card, with more to come soon.

In addition to the standard GTX 1080 Founders Edition, which is completely stock and the GTX 1080 ACX 3.0, which is based on both reference PCB and reference clocks but features EVGA's new ACX 3.0 cooler, EVGA has also unveiled three factory-overclocked and custom graphics cards, the EVGA GTX 1080 SC Gaming ACX 3.0, GTX 1080 FTW Gaming ACX 3.0 and the GTX 1080 Classified Gaming ACX 3.0 graphics cards.

The biggest update in the lineup is the new EVGA ACX 3.0 cooler, which further upgrades the already impressive ACX 2.0 cooler by increased heatpipe and copper contact area with STraight Heat Pipe 3.0, which in terms made it 10 percent cooler as well as a new optimal tuned heatsink and fin design, which made it 13 percent quieter, compared to the ACX 2.0 cooler.

The new EVGA ACX 3.0 cooler still comes with memory/MOSFET cooling plate, dB Inverter and two Double Ball Bearing fans but now also comes with RGB LEDs placed in the shroud and fully controllable via EVGA's PrecisionX OC software, at least on some models. All Geforce GTX 1080 models come with a backplate.

In case you missed it before, the GTX 1080 Founders Edition works at 1,607MHz base and 1,733MHz GPU Boost clocks while 8GB of GDDR5X memory is clocked at 2,500MHz (10,000MHz effective). The EVGA GTX 1080 ACX 3.0 is the same and only replaces the stock blower fan with the new EVGA ACX 3.0 cooler. IT does not feature RGB LEDs but only white ones, same as the reference one.

The EVGA GTX 1080 SC (SuperClocked) Gaming ACX 3.0 is the next in line and it is pretty much an overclocked stock graphics card as it works at 1,708MHz GPU base and 1,847MHz GPU Boost clocks while memory remained at reference 10,000MHz. It does come with EVGA's ACX 3.0 cooler but does not feature RGB LEDs and still needs a single 8-pin PCIe power connector.

The EVGA GTX 1080 FTW (For The Win) Gaming ACX 3.0 graphics card is a completely different beast as it comes with a custom PCB with 10-phase VRM, adjustable RGB LEDs, and EVGA Double BIOS. It needs two 8-pin PCI-Express power connectors but, unfortunately, EVGA still did not finalize the clocks.

The EVGA GTX 1080 Classified is pretty much the same but it comes with a triple BIOS, beefier 14-phase VRM, which should provide further overclocking potential and make it one of the best GTX 1080 on the market, at least until EVGA makes the Kingpin Edition.

Unfortunately, only the EVGA Geforce GTX 1080 Founders Edition is currently available for US $699.99 on both EVGA's official site and some retail/e-tail shops but ACX 3.0 equipped cards should come soon as well.

We've been anxious to get our mitts on EVGA's GTX 680 SC Signature 2 graphics card as this is the company's first dual fan GTX 680. The card isn’t much faster than the original GTX 680 SC Signature, i.e. 1097MHz vs. 1084MHz GPU and 1552MHz vs. 1552MHz memory, but the new cooler means a quieter card that overclocks better. Good news however is that the new card is priced the same as the original GTX 680 Signature - $519.99.

The following two photos show our temperature measurements – first up is the GTX 680 SC Signature 2, followed by GTX 680 SC Signature. The difference of 3°C says enough really, especially since the cooler was almost inaudible. The two fans don’t go over 2040RPM, while the Signature’s single fan reached 2400RPM.

EVGA GTX 680 SC Signature 2

EVGA GTX 680 SC Signature

Unfortunately, we’ve sent the GTX 680 SC Signature back to EVGA and we couldn’t compare the results to those of the Signature 2, since the 304.79 driver we used for the latter card give better results. Users shouldn’t expect any major differences in performance of the two Signature cards, because they’re similarly clocked. We’ll soon see whether two fan cooling helps with overclocking so stay tuned.